842 research outputs found

    Dilepton production in proton-proton collisions at top RHIC energy

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    We study dielectron production in proton-proton collisions at top RHIC beam energy within an extended statistical hadronization model. The invariant mass spectrum of correlated dielectron pairs is evaluated in the low invariant mass region and calculated results are compared with the PHENIX experiment. The model is found to be able to describe the data very well up to invariant masses of 1 GeV with few adjustable parameters.Comment: Proceedings of Hot Quarks 201

    Dilepton production in p+p, Cu+Cu and Au+Au collisions at 200 AGeV

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    We study dilepton production in proton-proton, Cu+Cu as well as in Au+Au collisions at the center-of-mass energy 200 GeV per participating nucleon pair within an extended statistical hadronization model. In extension to earlier studies we incorporate transport calculations for an estimate of uncorrelated e+e- -pairs from semileptonic D meson decays. While the invariant mass spectrum of dielectrons is well understood in the p+p collisions, severe discrepancies among different model scenarios based on hadronic degrees of freedom and recent data from the PHENIX Collaboration are found in heavy-ion collisions in the low mass region from 0.15 to 0.6 GeV as well as in the intermediate mass regime from 1.1 to 3 GeV when employing the standard dilepton sources. We investigate, furthermore, the background from correlated dileptons that are not emitted as a pair from a parent hadron but emerge from semileptonic decays of two correlated daughter hadrons. Our calculations suggest a sizeable contribution of such sources in central heavy-ion collisions in the low mass region. However, even the upper limits of our calculations are found to be far below the dilepton mass spectra of the PHENIX Collaboration.Comment: revised version, 17 pages, 13 figure

    Formative assessment in Finnish education:what it is, how it is practiced today and what its future is

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    Abstract. This thesis covers the topic of formative assessment in Finland, what it is, how it is practiced and what is the current and future situation of it. There is a lot of theoretical background answering the question of what formative assessment is. In order to find out the current assessment trends in Finland, this thesis investigates the national core curriculum, a recent publication on assessment by eNorssi, and an on-going in-service education on assessment, organised by the National board of education. Some recent studies in Finland show that the assessment literacy of teachers may not be appropriate, so new materials and in-service educations are extremely necessary considering the importance of assessment in the school world. A clear focus is put on the formative assessment practices in the eNorssi and in the in-service education materials, but a problem lies on the slow change of the assessment culture.Tiivistelmä. Tämän kandidaatintutkielman aiheena on formatiivinen arviointi suomalaisissa kouluissa. Tutkielma tarkastelee, mitä formatiivinen arviointi on, kuinka sitä harjoitetaan käytännössä, mikä on sen tämänhetkinen asema ja minkälaiset tulevaisuuden näkymät sillä on Suomessa. Aiheesta löytyy paljon teoreettista taustatietoa määrittämään, mitä formatiivinen arviointi on. Nykyisten arviointitrendien selvittämiseksi tämä tutkielma tarkastelee uusinta opetussuunnitelmaa (2014), hiljattain julkaistua eNorssin kokoamaa arvioinnin opetuslehtistä sekä Opetushallituksen järjestämän opettajien arviointikoulutuksen materiaaleja. Suomessa on julkaistu tutkimuksia, joista selviää, että suomalaiset opettajat kokevat epävarmuutta omasta arviointiosaamisestaan, joten edellä mainittujen kaltaiset koulutukset ja lisämateriaalit ovat enemmän kuin tarpeen. Arviointi on yksi tärkeimmistä opettajan tehtävistä, joten se ansaitsee tulla tutkituksi ja näin kehitettäväksi. Formatiivinen arviointi on saanut suurta huomiota maailmalla ja on myös keskeinen teema Suomen koulutusjärjestelmässä. Arviointikulttuuria ollaan muuttamassa, mutta muutos on hidasta ja osa oppilaista jää edelleen vaille sopivaa ja oikeudenmukaista arviointia

    Superconducting MoSi nanowires

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    We have fabricated disordered superconducting nanowires of molybdenium silicide. A molybdenium nanowire is first deposited on top of silicon, and the alloy is formed by rapid thermal annealing. The method allows tuning of the crystal growth to optimise, e.g., the resistivity of the alloy for potential applications in quantum phase slip devices and superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. The wires have effective diameters from 42 to 79 nm, enabling the observation of crossover from conventional superconductivity to regimes affected by thermal and quantum fluctuations. In the smallest diameter wire and at temperatures well below the superconducting critical temperature, we observe residual resistance and negative magnetoresistance, which can be considered as fingerprints of quantum phase slips

    Nonlocal Multiscale Single Image Statistics From Sentinel-1 SAR Data for High Resolution Bitemporal Forest Wind Damage Detection

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    Change detection of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data is a challenge for high-resolution applications. This study presents a new nonlocal averaging approach (STAl'SAR) to reduce the speckle of single Sentinel-1 SAR images and statistical parameters derived from the image. The similarity of SAR pixels is based on the statistics of 3 x 3 window as represented by the mean, standard deviation, median, minimum, and maximum. K-means clustering is used to divide the SAR image in 30 similarity clusters. The nonlocal averaging is carried out within each cluster separately in magnitude order of the 3 x 3 window averages. The nonlocal filtering is applicable not only to the original pixel backscattering values but also to statistical parameters, such as standard deviation. The statistical parameters to be filtered can represent any window size, according to the need of the application. The nonlocally averaged standard deviation derived in two spatial resolutions, 3 x 3 and 7 x 7 windows, are demonstrated here for improving the resolution in which the forest damages can be detected using the VH polarized backscattering spatial variation change.Peer reviewe

    Electronic structure of triangular, hexagonal and round graphene flakes near the Fermi level

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    The electronic shell structure of triangular, hexagonal and round graphene quantum dots (flakes) near the Fermi level has been studied using a tight-binding method. The results show that close to the Fermi level the shell structure of a triangular flake is that of free massless particles, and that triangles with an armchair edge show an additional sequence of levels ("ghost states"). These levels result from the graphene band structure and the plane wave solution of the wave equation, and they are absent for triangles with an zigzag edge. All zigzag triangles exhibit a prominent edge state at the Fermi level, and few low-energy conduction electron states occur both in triangular and hexagonal flakes due to symmetry reasons. Armchair triangles can be used as building blocks for other types of flakes that support the ghost states. Edge roughness has only a small effect on the level structure of the triangular flakes, but the effect is considerably enhanced in the other types of flakes. In round flakes, the states near the Fermi level depend strongly on the flake radius, and they are always localized on the zigzag parts of the edge

    Analysis of dilepton production in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=200 GeV within the Parton-Hadron-String Dynamics (PHSD) transport approach

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    We address dilepton production in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=200 GeV by employing the parton-hadron-string dynamics (PHSD) off-shell transport approach. Within the PHSD one goes beyond the quasiparticle approximation by solving generalized transport equations on the basis of the off-shell Kadanoff-Baym equations for the Green's functions in the phase-space representation. The approach consistently describes the full evolution of a relativistic heavy-ion collision from the initial hard scatterings and string formation through the dynamical deconfinement phase transition to the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) as well as hadronization and to the subsequent interactions in the hadronic phase. {With partons described in the PHSD by the dynamical quasiparticle model (DQPM) - matched to reproduce lattice QCD results in thermodynamic equilibrium} - we calculate, in particular, the dilepton radiation from partonic interactions through the reactions q+qbar->gamma^*, q+qbar->gamma^*+g and q+g->gamma^*+q (qbar+g->gamma^*+qbar) in the early stage of relativistic heavy-ion collisions. By comparing our results to the data from the PHENIX Collaboration, we study the relative importance of different dilepton production mechanisms and point out the regions in phase space where partonic channels are dominant. Furthermore, explicit predictions are presented for dileptons within the acceptance of the STAR detector system and compared to the preliminary data.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1107.340

    Heat Capacity of Mesoscopic Superconducting Disks

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    We study the heat capacity of isolated giant vortex states, which are good angular momentum (LL) states, in a mesoscopic superconducting disk using the Ginzburg-Landau (GL) theory. At small magnetic fields the LL=0 state qualitatively behaves like the bulk sample characterized by a discontinuity in heat capacity at TcT_c. As the field is increased the discontinuity slowly turns into a continuous change which is a finite size effect. The higher LL states show a continuous change in heat capacity at TcT_c at all fields. We also show that for these higher LL states, the behavior of the peak position with change in field is related to the paramagnetic Meissner effect (irreversible) and can lead to an unambiguous observation of positive magnetization in mesoscopic superconductors.Comment: Final versio

    Geometric magic numbers of sodium clusters: Interpretation of the melting behaviour

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    Putative global minima of sodium clusters with up to 380 atoms have been located for two model interatomic potentials. Structures based upon the Mackay icosahedra predominate for both potentials, and the magic numbers for the Murrell-Mottram model show excellent agreement with the sizes at which maxima in the latent heat and entropy change at melting have been found in experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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